“Seed: Climate Change Resilience” is open through Sept. 22. The University of New Mexico-affiliated collective SeedBroadcast is mounting the exhibition with the help of New Mexico indigenous seed savers, acequia farmers, permaculturists and more to explore seed resilience in an era of tumultuous climate change.

The group followed four farm projects from spring through summer and autumn harvest. Across the seasons, they interviewed farmers and photographed a time line from seeds to cultivating, planting, tending, drought, locusts, hail, labor, struggle and harvest.

The exhibition includes performances by Albuquerque Poet Laureate Michelle Otero from 5 to 8:30 p.m. July 18. Otero and local poets will read from their works with a screening of the film “Seed Travels” by Sarah Montgomery and Liz Gioetz.

The contemporary chamber group Chatter will perform Das Lied von Der Ede (“The Song of the Earth”) by Gustav Mahler, arranged by Arnold Schoenberg for 15 players from 5 to 8:30 p.m. Aug. 15.

To close the exhibition, “Encuentro de Semillas” (“Gathering of the Seeds”) will take place from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sept. 21. SeedBroadcast and its community partners will share strategies of seed resilience. Visitors will learn about seed saving, take part in a seed exchange, harvest amaranth, make art with Axle Contemporary and hear a panel discussion about bio-regional and indigenous arid land agriculture, climate change and seeds.